Besides Slatina de Timiș and Bulci, there are ethnic Romanian Roman Catholics in other communities in the Banat as well. These are probably the result of recent ethnic and linguistic assimilation of a small part of the Danube Swabian or 'Austrian' population through mixed families. In Beșenova Veche and Breștea the origin is Paulician Bulgarian. In industrial communities the origin can be mixed ('Austrians', Danube Swabians, Czechs, Hungarians etc.). Percentages are hard to determine exactly, but the estimte based on the 2002 census is as follows:

In Boinești and Huta Certeze the origin is Slovak, in Cârlibaba Nouă it is German (Zipsers) and in Valea Vinului it is Hungarian. The village of Bărăbanț close to Alba Iulia is a very special case, since here there is a Transylvanian Hungarian population that has been Romanianised only linguistically, which brings it rather closer to the Bulci case. The village was founded in the Middle Ages as a Transylvanian Saxon village by colonists from Brabant (hence the name) and then remained property of the Bishopric of Transylvania, which is why it did not become Reformed; 11% of the population was Roman Catholic and Romanian in 2002, compared to 33% in 1930, when they nonethteless declared themselves as Romanian-speaking Hungarians. Above the corresponding map for the 2002 census. Blue = at least 75%, green = 50-74%, yellow =
25-49%,
red-orange = 10-24%, black = 4-9%.